It's available on windows, either as a free powertoy for xp, or you can
search for virtual desktop on download.com and come up with dozens. It's
amazed me it's taken this long for apple to have this come out, it's been on
unix/linux for a decade? It's been on windows for years for that matter
to
That is a really nice and compelling feature.
For some people this will be valuable. But for those of us who don't
generate critical or important data or files all day, it's not enough to
merit a purchase. I might feel different in a few months or if I started
having trouble.
Tom Piwowar wrot
>There are some neat new features and
>some worthwhile improvements to the standard Apple programs that would
>be useful, but I'm happy and comfortable doing things in ways that are
>becoming old fashioned
I think (after the long discussions we have had here about backups) the
best feature may
MicroCenter is offering X.5 for $109 with a $40 rebate until 11Nov.
That gets it down to $89.
On 10/26/07, gerald <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> If 10.4 saved you 5 minutes a day, would it not be worth the $100 they want
> for it? or is your time that invaluable?
>
> 10.5 is only $109, including S
At 3:29 PM -0400 10/26/07, gerald wrote:
If 10.4 saved you 5 minutes a day, would it not be worth the $100
they want for it? or is your time that invaluable?
I doubt it will save me any time. It WILL permit me to run Google
Earth on that machine. Which will probably burn up time, rather than
At 9:32 PM -0400 10/26/07, Wayne Dernoncourt wrote:
Jordan
I think 10.4 was a big improvement over 10.3. From what
I've read so far, and I've looked in to it quite a bit,
there are no features of 10.5 that would motivate me to
get it. There are some neat new features and some
The one r
mike
> It's available on windows, either as a free powertoy for xp,
> or you can search for virtual desktop on download.com and
> come up with dozens. It's amazed me it's taken this long
> for apple to have this come out, it's been on unix/linux
> for a decade? It's been on windows for years for
Jordan
> I think 10.4 was a big improvement over 10.3. From what
> I've read so far, and I've looked in to it quite a bit,
> there are no features of 10.5 that would motivate me to
> get it. There are some neat new features and some
The one reason I'm getting it is Screens (correct name?
abilit
I think 10.4 was a big improvement over 10.3. From what I've read so
far, and I've looked in to it quite a bit, there are no features of 10.5
that would motivate me to get it. There are some neat new features and
some worthwhile improvements to the standard Apple programs that would
be useful,
I often would skip a major upgrade. Apple does it in such a way that
you have no problems skipping a generation of the OS. I would feel
perfectly safe in going from 10.3.9 to 10.5.
Steve
Snyder, Mark (NGIT-CA) wrote:
I have two computers running 10.3.9. One is a ~6 yr old Titanium
PowerBo
If 10.4 saved you 5 minutes a day, would it not be worth the $100 they want for
it? or is your time that invaluable?
10.5 is only $109, including S&H. seems like a decent value to me. why buy
10.4 for 50? or do g-4's not run 10.5? I'm new to macs, and am not allowed to
touch the thing i bo
I am hoping that the release of 10.5 will finally bring down the
price of 10.4 on eBay, so I can upgrade my 10.3.9 G4 machine. People
are paying what I consider to be CRAZY prices for 10.4. I have set my
price point at ~$50.
--
Roger
Lovettsville, VA
**
10.4.11 has not yet been released, but is imminent. Last update for
10.4 (planned anyway).
Thank you,
Mark Snyder
-Original Message-
Is 10.4.11 for the dual Macs? I have the updater set to run
everyday
and I'm only at 10.4.10 on my iMac G5. It's not a dual. Since I just
got
Is 10.4.11 for the dual Macs? I have the updater set to run everyday
and I'm only at 10.4.10 on my iMac G5. It's not a dual. Since I just
got a new Powerbook I was able to order 10.5 for the price of
shipping. After watching the movie on Apples website I'd say it is a
major upgrade. Not as
10.5, according to the NYT tech writer, is an evolutionary, not
revolutionary upgrade. About what Vista turned out compared to XP.
(Vista sales have peaked over the summer and are slowing. Big yawn.)
I guess a major release is what ever you crack it up to be. Since Apple
has been bringing the
I've been reading that this is not a major release, I'm wondering what
denotes it as major for those mac users on the list thinking of getting it?
Mike
On 10/26/07, Snyder, Mark (NGIT-CA) <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> I have two computers running 10.3.9. One is a ~6 yr old Titanium
> PowerBook
I have two computers running 10.3.9. One is a ~6 yr old Titanium
PowerBook that is too slow for Leopard, 10.5. So it will die with
10.3.9. The other is a dual 2 GHz G5 desktop, currently running 10.3.9
that I will upgrade to 10.5 after I read about other people's experience
with 10.5 and G5 comp
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